Indian start-up seeks to eradicate attacks on women

CHIPPING IN:The fitness band-like device that transmits location and audio data when activated is to be sold online before entering stores in India and worldwide

Thomson Reuters Foundation,
NEW DELHI

The founders of a technology start-up hope their invention would make attacks on women a “concern of the past” in India, which was named the world’s most dangerous nation for women in a poll of experts.

Leaf Wearables, a New Delhi-based company started by five engineers in 2015, invented SAFER PRO — a tiny computer chip built into a wristband that sends alerts to emergency contacts, even in areas without cellular phone service.

Once activated, it inconspicuously transmits location details to the network of responders within 90 seconds and records audio.

“We have a dream to see that safety becomes a concern of the past, so people can write about a time when women were unsafe,” cofounder Avinash Bansal said. “We want this in history books rather than the present.”

India was considered the most dangerous nation in the world for women by experts in a survey published last month by the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

Crimes against women in India spiked more than 80 percent between 2007 and 2016, when there were four cases of rape reported every hour, government data showed.

“Say if there are 100 cases taking place, then we want to be able to solve 90 of them or try to go as close to the 100 as possible,” cofounder Manik Mehta said.

Mehta said he and his colleagues were inspired to try to “make a difference” after the fatal gang-rape of a young student aboard a bus in New Delhi in 2012, which triggered national outrage and led to tougher anti-rape laws.

Another of Leaf Wearables’ founders was at the stop where the victim had boarded the bus and realized how unsafe he felt in the area, which is frequented by air hostesses due to its proximity to the airport.

“He came to us and said: ‘I felt unsafe ... let’s figure out a way where we can do something ourselves, maybe we can think of a solution that can be implemented globally,’” Mehta said. “And that is how the idea started.”

The idea developed into the computer chip, which last month won the US$1 million Women’s Safety XPRIZE, a global competition for technologies to help protect women and girls from violence, in New York.

The company founders said they hope to use the prize as a springboard for the market launch of SAFER PRO — which looks like a fitness band with a red alert button — early next year, after a series of product tests.

“If we say that you are going to be safe because of it, then we have to make sure that the product is, in fact, going to save you,” Mehta said. “So the testing is very thorough.”

Leaf Wearables plans to price it at about US$35, but might reduce the cost by asking the government to either subsidize the product or lower the tax on it.

Initially, SAFER PRO is to be sold on the e-commerce Web sites Amazon and Flipkart. The company would then place it in brick-and-mortar stores in India before branching out internationally.

“We initially thought women’s safety was a native problem, but we saw a lot of interest in our product in the States,” Mehta said.

“It is not as safe as we think,” Mehta said. “Unfortunately, these kind of dangers are everywhere.”

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